Publication | Closed Access
Subduction of thick oceanic plateau and high‐angle normal‐fault earthquakes intersecting the slab
36
Citations
18
References
2017
Year
EngineeringFault GeologyEarthquake HazardsEarth ScienceIntraslab DeformationGeophysicsPlate BoundaryInternal Earth ProcessesSlab BuoyancyRegional TectonicsInterplate EarthquakesMarine GeologyHigh‐angle Normal‐fault EarthquakesSeismic ImagingEarthquake RuptureTectonicsFault GeometrySeismologySubduction ZoneCivil EngineeringThick Oceanic Plateau
Abstract The role of seamounts on interplate earthquakes has been debated. However, its impact on intraslab deformation is poorly understood. Here we present unexpected evidence for large normal‐fault earthquakes intersecting the slab just ahead of a subducting seamount. In 1995, a series of earthquakes with maximum magnitude of 7.1 occurred in northern Ryukyu where oceanic plateaus are subducting. The aftershock distribution shows that conjugate faults with an unusually high dip angle of 70–80° ruptured the entire subducting crust. Seismic reflection images reveal that the plate interface is displaced over 1 km along one of the fault planes of the 1995 events. These results suggest that a lateral variation in slab buoyancy can produce sufficient differential stress leading to near‐vertical normal‐fault earthquakes within the slab. On the contrary, the upper surface of the seamount (plate interface) may correspond to a weakly coupled region, reflecting the dual effects of seamounts/plateaus on subduction earthquakes.
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